
Why Coughing or Sneezing Can Aggravate Back Pain
If coughing or sneezing spikes back pain, it can point to irritated tissues, but it does not automatically mean a serious injury.

If coughing or sneezing spikes back pain, it can point to irritated tissues, but it does not automatically mean a serious injury.

Some low back pain follows a routine strain pattern, but weakness, numbness, fever, trauma, urinary symptoms, or bowel/bladder changes can mean it is time to seek care.

Back pain with fever, unexplained weight loss, or recurring night pain should not be brushed off. Learn which red flags need prompt medical evaluation and when conservative care may fit afterward.

Most low back pain does not need immediate MRI imaging, but certain findings make earlier evaluation more important.

A commute can add sitting, vibration, and traffic-related bracing that may contribute to low back discomfort for some workers.

One-sided neck pain with shoulder blade tension is often mechanical, but arm symptoms, trauma, fever, chest symptoms, or worsening weakness need prompt attention.